About this deal
Kids will love exploring their first babysitting jobs in their imaginations because you can be anything with Barbie®! When he was 21 and employed by a hosiery company in London, Beecham, now 71, worked something out: “I really liked women. I was brought in because I’m a bit of a maverick and I’ll just try things that have never been done before,” says Gary Little, who became creative director of Grosvenor in 1994. To enable personalised advertising (like interest-based ads), we may share your data with our marketing and advertising partners using cookies and other technologies.
playset includes Skipper™ doll wearing fashion and accessories, toddler doll wearing fashion and shoes, flipping potty seat with working lid, sink with spinning toilet paper and themed accessories.Barbie doll is a girl on-the-go, and with self-care, she’ll have energy to go even further -- with Barbie spa doll and her puppy, kids can play out a soothing moment with a spa theme. The display is just one part of the museum’s journey through time, a pitstop between 80s magazines and 00s snacks. There was loads and loads and loads of clay,” says Yve Hooson, 59, who designed bottles for Grosvenor in the 90s.
In 2002, toy company Hasbro purchased Grosvenor; Beecham was officially the world’s first bubble bath multimillionaire (in 2015, he caused a stir with plans to build London’s biggest domestic basement at his home). Kids 3 to 8 years old will love playing out self-care with Barbie doll and learning to take care of themselves, too, because when a girl plays with Barbie, she imagines everything she can become! Writing in the Daily Mirror on 22 December 1977, columnist Keith Waterhouse recommended swapping bog-standard giftsets for Beecham’s stuff: “I suggest for once that you get on the ball and invest in Star Wars bath salts,” he joked. Feel free to always message us with more questions or photos (Etsy only allows 10 photos) before purchasing. Maybe it’s no bad thing that I can no longer get a bubble bath Bart, that today’s children make do with a normal-shaped bottle with an Elsa sticker slapped on it.Representation and inclusivity are important to us and we create dolls with a wide range of skin tones, body types, hairstyles, varying disabilities, and fashions to reflect the world kids see today.